Literature DB >> 29430505

Role of Radical Cystectomy in Non-Organ Confined Bladder Cancer: A Systematic Review.

Roger Li1, Michael Metcalfe1, Janet Kukreja1, Neema Navai1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Currently, a diagnosis of non-organ confined bladder cancer (NOCBCa) confers a grave prognosis. The mainstay of treatment consists of systemic chemotherapy. However, it must be recognized that NOCBCa is a heterogeneous disease state with important clinical distinctions. While surgical extirpation has traditionally been regarded as overly aggressive for all NOCBCa patients, its utility as part of a multimodal treatment strategy in various clinical scenarios has not been thoroughly investigated.
OBJECTIVE: To perform a review of the literature regarding the role of radical cystectomy and pelvic lymph node dissection (RC-LND) in the setting of NOCBCa.
METHODS: Medline, and Pubmed electronic database were queried for English language articles from January 1990 to Nov 2016 on RC-LND for cT4, lymph node positive, and metastatic urothelial cancer. NOCBCa was separated into four distinct clinical scenarios: 1. Locally advanced/unresectable disease (cT4bN0M0); 2. Occult pelvic nodal disease (pN+) (cTxN0M0 and pTxN1-3Mx); 3. Clinical node positive disease (cN+) (cTxN1-3M0); and 4. Distant metastatic disease (TxNxM1). Evidence for the role of RC-LND in each of these clinical scenarios was summarized.
RESULTS: cT4b may be more effectively treated by presurgical chemotherapy (PSC) than other forms of NOCBCa. Although clinical response predicted improved survival, surgical factors, such as surgical margin status may also play a role in determining outcomes. In well selected patients, 5-year CSS may reach 60% after consolidative RC-LND. Survival in patients found to have pathologic nodal metastases without PSC was dictated not only by the histologically verified metastatic nodal disease burden, but also by the meticulousness of the lymph node dissection. In these patients, adjuvant chemotherapy may improve survival. On the other hand, in patients undergoing RC-LND after PSC, pathologic complete response (pCR) was the strongest predictor of improved CSS. The results of population based studies have suggested a therapeutic role by consolidative RC-LND in both patients with cN+ and metastatic BCa (mBCa). For the cN+ population, 5-year OS was 31% in patients undergoing RC-LND after PSC vs. 14% in those receiving chemotherapy alone. Similarly, consolidative intensive local therapy improved OS by approximately 5 months in patients with mBCa. Metastasectomy has also been shown to be effective in small retrospective series and may especially be useful in patients with solitary pulmonary lesions.
CONCLUSIONS: Extirpative treatment of the primary tumor may be an important step in the management of de novo NOCBCa. The current retrospective and population based studies have demonstrated improved survival outcomes in patients with NOCBCa following RC-LND, especially in those with favorable response to PSC. With the advent of minimally invasive surgery and the enhanced post-surgical recovery protocols, RC-LND has not only been demonstrated to be feasible, but also tolerable in the setting of advanced BCa. Well designed, prospective trials are needed to definitively assess the value of surgical extirpation for NOCBCa patients.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Radical cystectomy; metastatic bladder cancer; non-organ confined bladder cancer

Year:  2018        PMID: 29430505      PMCID: PMC5798530          DOI: 10.3233/BLC-170130

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bladder Cancer


Non-organ confined bladder cancer radical cystectomy and pelvic lymph node dissection presurgical chemotherapy cancer specific survival pathologic complete response bladder cancer metastatic bladder cancer overall survival recurrence free survival American Joint Committee on Cancer classification muscle invasive bladder cancer transurethral resection of bladder tumor exam under anesthesia lymph node enhanced recovery after surgery non-muscle invasive bladder cancer lymph node density complete response upper tract urothelial carcinoma local treatment robotic-assisted radical cystectomy

INTRODUCTION

Recently, local extirpative surgery has been increasingly integrated into the multimodal approach to metastatic disease arising from a wide range of solid tumors [1-3]. In theory, local treatment can be beneficial in three ways: 1. Eradicate residual disease after favorable response to presurgical systemic therapy; 2. Minimize disease burden and improving the response to adjuvant systemic therapy; 3. Palliate symptoms related to locally advanced disease. Specifically for BCa, high incidence of relapse has been demonstrated at chemo-sensitive sites of disease, emphasizing the importance of consolidative surgical extirpation [4]. Along these lines, RC-LND may lead to improved RFS and OS in patients with metastatic bladder cancer (mBCa). Albeit the gold standard for organ-confined BCa [5], RC-LND is associated with high perioperative morbidity. Mean length of hospital stay after RC-LND ranges between 9–11 days [6, 7], with high complication (58–77%) and readmission (27%) rates even at high-volume centers [8-10]. Hence, RC-LND could only be utilized selectively, especially in the elderly and frail population afflicted by mBCa. Additionally, a complex array of clinical scenarios exist in NOCBCa, making the interpretation of existing data difficult. Finally, recent updates in the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) classification downgrading common iliac nodal disease from M1 to N3 status made many previous studies obsolete [11]. In this review, we aim to systematically analyze the existing data on RC-LND performed in four different clinical scenarios of NOCBCa as illustrated by four index patients: 1. Locally advanced/unresectable disease (cT4bN0M0); 2. Occult pelvic nodal disease (pN+) (cTxN0M0 and pTxN1-3Mx); 3. Clinical node positive disease (cN+) (cTxN1-3M0); and 4. Distant metastatic disease (TxNxM1) (Fig. 1).
Fig.1

Flow diagram of patient categories and method of therapy.

Flow diagram of patient categories and method of therapy.

CURRENT MANAGEMENT

Cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy has been the standard-of-care for NOCBCa since the late 1980’s [12]. Despite clear survival benefits, life expectancy after treatment remains poor. For instance, OS in mBCa patients after chemotherapy range between 12.5–14.8 months [12-14]. Prognosis is especially poor after post-chemotherapy relapse, with median OS falling short of 8 months [15]. Although recent advances in immunotherapy have offered hope to many mBCa patients failing cisplatin-based chemotherapy, objective response rates remain relatively low (between 15–21%) [16]. Despite their modest response rates, as of this writing, five immune checkpoint blockade agents have been approved by the FDA, with two also showing efficacy as first-line agents in the cisplatin ineligible population [16]. Due to the relative lack of evidence demonstrating benefit of local control, RC-LND has not been incorporated into treatment guidelines for NOCBCa in its current iteration [5]. Consequently, local disease progression may lead to symptoms such as intractable hematuria and obstructive uropathy, severely compromising quality of life and requiring repeated invasive palliative procedures [17, 18].

THE IMPACT OF IMPERFECT CLINICAL STAGING

The management of MIBC has been undercut by the lack of accurate staging tools [19]. Clinical tumor staging consists of clinical and pathologic findings on TURBT and examination under anesthesia (EUA), while cross-sectional imaging is relied upon for the detection of perivesical, nodal and metastatic spread. Although CT urography has been the most widely used imaging modality, its accuracies for staging both the primary tumor as well as metastatic disease remain woefully inadequate. In evaluating the primary tumor, CT is unable to distinguish between Ta to T3a tumors [20]. Moreover, as assessment of nodal metastases by CT is based solely on size. As a result, poor sensitivity (31%) results from its inability to detect small-sized nodal metastases [21]. Despite offering enhanced soft tissue visualization, MRI only yielded incrementally improved accuracies of 63% compared to 56% by CT [22]. In practice, the incidence of occult nodal metastases was found to be as high as 40% in patients with high clinical risk features [23]. Ultimately, inaccurate clinical staging can lead to both unintended overtreatment in patients with occult metastatic and/or locally advanced disease and undertreatment in patients with pseudometastatic disease. To recapitulate the clinical conundrum resulting from the imperfect clinical staging tools, two index patients with lymph node (LN) metastases were created. Index patient 2 represents clinical understaging. To understand the role of surgical extirpation in this setting, data from historical surgical series without the use of PSC were analyzed. On the other hand, index patient 3 represents the common clinical scenario with cN+ disease. In interpreting the results of cN+ series, the readers must be reminded that many of the included studies did not require histologic proof of nodal metastases prior to treatment. Thus, improved outcomes may reflect inclusion of patients with false positive clinical nodal metastases.

INDEX PATIENT 1: CT4B DISEASE IN THE ABSENCE OF DISTANT DISEASE

Prior to analyzing the existing literature on the efficacy of RC-LND for T4b BCa, the important distinction between cT4b and pT4b must be emphasized. cT4b BCa is defined by fixation on EUA after TURBT and/or evidence of direct invasion of an adjacent organ (other than prostate, vagina, or uterus) on cross sectional imaging [19]. On the other hand, pT4b BCa represents direct invasion of the abdominal/pelvic wall on histologic examination of the RC-LND specimen. While many studies have documented the futility of extirpative surgery in treating pT4b BCa [24-26], few have assessed the efficacy of a multimodal approach incorporating RC-LND to cT4b BCa. That cT4b BCa may be more effectively treated by cisplatin-based chemotherapy followed by surgery than other forms of metastatic BCa was first suggested by Fossa et al. [27]. In this study, observed response rate to chemotherapy in cT4b BCa patients was 57%, with 28% achieving CR. Moreover, 5-year OS was 25% in these patients, higher than those achieved in others with LN, lung or other sites of metastases. Even without the aid of robotic surgical technology and the modern day ERAS protocol, consolidative RC-LND was rendered to 28 of 245 patients with cT4b or pelvic nodal metastases. Subsequently, Herr et al. further strengthened the case for post-chemotherapy surgery by demonstrating 41% OS in patients achieving CR by way of multimodal treatment [28]. However, due to the small cohorts, neither study identified favorable prognostic indicators in cT4b patients receiving combination chemotherapy/RC-LND. To date, Black et al. performed the only study specifically examining the pathologic features and survival in cT4b patients undergoing RC-LND. In 23 patients, 30% were found to have pT4 BCa, while 26% were downstaged to NMIBC. Although only 3 patients were found to have a positive surgical margin, this did confer a poorer CSS (HR 5.3; 95% CI: 1.25–22.8, p = 0.024). In addition, pathologic nodal metastasis also predicted poorer CSS (HR 29.3; 95% CI: 3.1–275, p = 0.003). Remarkably, 5-year CSS in this group was 60% [29]. Although limited by the small cohort size, results of this study suggested that RC-LND can be efficacious in a select group of patients with cT4b BCa.

INDEX PATIENT 2: OCCULT NODE POSITIVE DISEASE

Skinner was the first to demonstrate that long term survival was attainable in some BCa patients with nodal metastases following surgical resection [30]. Thereafter, many small retrospective series demonstrated 5-year postoperative survival ranging from 29–39.4% [31-35] (Table 1). In the two largest series to date, 10-year RFS was 34% per Stein et al. [6] and CSS was 16.7% per Hautmann et al. [36]. However, the survival benefit specifically derived from RC-LND is difficult to assess.
Table 1

pN+ disease without presurgical chemotherapy

Study (year)Number of patients% of RC-LND patientsFollow upSurvival# of positive nodes predicting survivalComments
Lerner (1993)13222%5.5 yrs (2.6–18.8 yrs)Median PFS 1.5 rys, 5 yr OS 29%6pT3b associated with increased risk of progression and death
Aprikian (1995)2521.6%2.2 yrs (0.6–8.7 yrs)Median OS 2.3 yrs, 3 yr OS 33%
Vieweg (1999)19325.3%7.7 yrsMedian OS ∼2 yrs, 5yr OS 31.2%
Mills (2001)8318%Median OS 1.7 yrs, 5 yrs OS 29%5Lymph node capsule perforation and diameter >0.5 cm associated with increased mortality
Stein (2003)24423%>10 yrs (0–28 yrs)5 yrs RFS 35%8Extravesical primary tumor and 15 or less removed lymph nodes conferred higher recurrece
Frank (2003)1544.5 yrs (0.1–13.9 yrs)Median CSS 4.5 yrs, 5 yr CSS 39.4%5Adjuvant chemo and number of positive LN’s associated with CSS
Madersbacher (2003)12424%3.8 yrs (0.1–14.7 yrs)5yr OS 26%Adjuvant chemo improved OS
pN+ disease without presurgical chemotherapy Incident in 18–24% of all patients undergoing RC-LND without PSC [6, 36, 37], pN+ BCa garnered much attention and many studies were performed to identify prognosticators for postsurgical survival. Early on, many recognized that even in patients with pN+ BCa, pathologic T staging continued to play an important role [35, 38]. In his analysis of 244 patients with pN+ BCa, Stein et al. found 10-year RFS to be 44% in patients with organ confined BCa compared to 30% in those with extravesical extension (p = 0.003) [38]. Similarly, high LN disease burden was found to portend poor survival [31–35, 38]. Whereas early reports differentiated survival based on N staging [31, 35], others found cutoffs in the number of metastatic LNs to be prognostic for short survival [6, 32–34, 38]. For example, Stein et al. found patients with more than 8 nodal metastases having a dismal 10-year RFS of 10%, compared to 40% in those with lighter metastatic burden [38]. In another study consisting of 154 pN+ BCa patients, the optimal threshold for prognosticating CSS was found to be 5 [32], corroborating many previous reports [6, 33, 34]. In addition, the number of LNs retrieved during surgical resection was also found to be prognostic [38-40]. In a secondary analysis of the data from SWOG 8710, Herr et al. pinpointed 10 LNs as the minimum requirement for conferring higher RFS and OS in pN0 and pN1 patients [41]. Incorporating both the number of metastatic LNs and LNs retrieved, Stein et al. coined the term lymph node density (LND) and found a cutoff of 20% having prognostic value for RFS (43% 10-year RFS if LND <20% vs. 17% 10-year RFS if LND >20%, p < 0.001). The prognostic value of LND was subsequently confirmed independently, albeit at a slightly different value of 25% [42]. Other features of nodal metastases shown to be relevant to OS include extracapsular extension and nodal metastasis diameter >0.5 cm [34]. In addition to the nodal yield, template of node dissection had also been shown to impact survival. In an inter-institutional study comparing a limited nodal dissection template (encompassing the area on the pelvic sidewall between the genitofemoral nerve laterally, the obturator nerve medially, bifurcation of the common iliac vessels proximally and the circumflex iliac vessels distally) to an extended template (additionally encompassing tissue adjacent to the common iliac vessels caudad to the ureteral crossing and medial and lateral to the internal iliac vessels), 5-year RFS post extended LND was found to be superior in pN+ patients (35% vs. 7%) [43]. However, a subsequent study failed to find survival benefit in patients undergoing superextended LND, which also included retroperitoneal nodes below the inferior mesenteric artery [44]. The implication on survival due to nodal metastases found over the common iliac vessels had been a historical point of contention. The 6th edition of the AJCC staging system defined these nodes as metastatic disease (M1), suggesting significantly worse outcomes compared to patients with regional nodal disease within the true pelvis. However, a review by Steven and Poulsen revealed that 5-year OS was similar between patients with nodal metastases above and below the bifurcation of the common iliac vessels [45]. Since, three additional studies confirmed the lack of prognostic difference between common iliac and pelvic nodal metastases [46-48], justifying its N3 classification in the 7th AJCC staging system. Taken together, surgeons performing RC-LND should aim to completely remove nodal tissue within the true pelvis and the common iliac templates up to the ureteral crossing. With thorough dissection, RC-LND consistently renders 29–39.4% of patients with pN+ BCa cancer free 5 years postoperatively. Patients with low nodal metastatic burden as well as organ confined primary disease seem to derive the most benefit from this procedure. More controversially, adjuvant chemotherapy may also improve survival in pN+ BCa patients after RC-LND. As the majority of recurrences occurred at distant sites, failure of cancer control was attributed to systemic disease spread [37]. In line with this, Madersbacher et al. found prolonged CSS in pN+ patients receiving adjuvant chemotherapy (21.5 mo vs. 13.1 mo) [37]. This finding was corroborated in another study, in which adjuvant chemotherapy was found to reduce cancer specific mortality 2.1 fold (p = 0.005) [32]. In contrast, several earlier studies failed to demonstrate survival benefit in patients receiving adjuvant chemotherapy [33, 35]. Different findings amongst these studies may be attributed to their smaller sample size or suboptimal chemotherapy regimen.

INDEX PATIENT 3: CLINICAL NODE POSITIVE DISEASE

After the emergence of level I evidence in support of using PSC prior to RC-LND [49, 50], a few studies investigated the role of combination therapy in treating the high risk MIBC patients with clinical nodal metastasis (cN+). A group from the Netherlands reported median CSS of 20 months and 5-year CSS in 29.2% [51, 52]. In comparison, median CSS and 5-year CSS in the patients rendered disease free on the pathologic specimen after PSC (pCR) were 127 months and 63.5%, respectively [51]. On multivariate analysis, pCR was found to be a significant predictor of CSS. In a smaller cohort, Ho et al. confirmed the important prognostic role of pCR, demonstrating 5-year CSS in 83.3% [53]. Notwithstanding its prognostic importance, pCR was found in just 14.5% of patients in a North American multi-institutional study consisting of 304 cN1-3 BCa patients treated with combination therapy [54]. Surprisingly, 38% with CR at the primary tumor site (pT0) were found to have persistent metastatic LNs. Survival in patients with pCR were in line with previous findings. On multivariate analysis, surgical margin and nodal yield of at least 15 were found to be significant predictors of OS, underscoring the importance of complete surgical consolidation after PSC. To further examine the value of consolidative RC-LND, two recent studies compared surgical resection and conservative management following chemotherapy for patients with cN+ BCa. Necchi et al. demonstrated improved PFS and OS in patients undergoing consolidative surgical lymphadenectomy after achieving CR with chemotherapy [55]. However, these results were difficult to interpret as the cohort included both cN+ patients on primary diagnosis as well as recurrence after RC-LND. Furthermore, the relatively small sample size consisted of both cN+ BCa and UTUC patients, arguably two distinct disease entities. More convincing evidence emerged from an analysis of 1,104 cN+ BCa patients within the National Cancer Data Base (NCDB) undergoing chemotherapy alone, cystectomy alone, PSC followed by RC-LND, and RC-LND followed by adjuvant chemotherapy [56]. While 5-year OS following chemotherapy (14%; 95% CI: 11–17%) and cystectomy (19%; 95% CI: 15–24%) were similar, improvements were noted in patients undergoing combination PSC followed by RC-LND (31%; 95% CI: 25–38%) and RC-LND followed by adjuvant chemotherapy (26%; 95% CI: 21–34%). Although PSC increased pN0 rate 11.2 fold, the importance of salvage RC-LND was evidenced by the dramatic increase in OS in patients undergoing combination therapy (31% 5-year OS) vs. chemotherapy alone (14% 5-year OS). As acknowledged by the authors, frailty was not captured in the database, and may bias the results in favor of combination therapy.

INDEX PATIENT 4: METASTATIC DISEASE

Local treatment (LT) in the metastatic setting has gained prominence for a wide range of solid tumors [1-3]. Theoretically, this approach can limit disease progression by suppressing the source of tumor growth factors and new metastases as well as impact the patients’ quality of life by eliminating the significant adverse effects brought on by local disease progression. For BCa, evidence is limited to only a few retrospective reviews. The most compelling data supporting the utility of intensive LT for metastatic BCa was compiled from the NCDB [57]. Of 3,753 patients receiving systemic chemotherapy, 297 received high-intensity LT, defined as RC or≥50 Gy radiotherapy. The median OS was found to be significantly longer in patients receiving high-intensity LT than those receiving conservative LT (14.92 [IQR, 9.82 to 30.72] vs. 9.95 [IQR, 5.29 to 17.08] months, p < 0.001). Furthermore, the subgroup receiving consolidative surgery (i.e. RC after chemotherapy) achieved even higher OS than the high-intensity LT group overall (17.71 [IQR, 10.41 to not estimable] vs. 12.42 [IQR, 7.06 to 20.37] months, p < 0.001). These findings were corroborated by subgroup analyses from earlier post chemotherapy cystectomy series [58]. In small subgroups with clinical extraregional lymph node (n = 11) and visceral metastases (n = 9), 5-year survival was achieved by 15%. Not surprisingly, patients harboring visceral metastases fared worse than those with clinical lymph node metastases only after consolidative surgery. RC may also be used towards palliating local symptoms brought on by disease progression, including bleeding, pain, dysuria and urinary obstruction. Of these, hematuria associated with bladder tumors causes significant morbidity and can be both difficult and expensive to treat. Invariably, some patients with intractable hematuria may require invasive procedures such as TURBT, urinary diversion, and ultimately RC. Having RC upfront may help avoid these unpleasant morbidities as well as the additional mortality risk associated with emergency surgery done in a desperation setting.

Metastesectomy

The role of metastatectomy for mBCa is controversial despite several retrospective reports demonstrating feasibility [59-64] (Table 2). As with any surgical procedure performed in the metastatic setting, patient selection is of paramount importance. In patients with heavy disease burden involving multiple organs, metastatectomy resulted in a dismal median OS of 7 months [63]. Moreover, asymptomatic patients prior to metastatectomy suffered a decrease in performance status as a result of the surgery. Although no formal selection criteria exists for metastatectomy, adherence to the following general principles may enhance efficacy: patients who demonstrated response to chemotherapy, recurrence in the initial or sole metastatic site, resectable tumors with clear margins, and a period of disease stability without progression (3 months) [64]. The small numbers in previous retrospective reviews on metastatectomy make it difficult to draw conclusions regarding the clinical characteristics predictive of treatment success [61, 64]. However, several studies have suggested favorable prognosis for patients with solitary pulmonary metastases [59, 60, 62, 65]. Ultimately, prospective trials are needed to test the efficacy of not only surgical extirpation of the primary disease, but also of metastatic lesions elsewhere.
Table 2

Metastasectomy

Study (year)Number of patientsMetastatic site% with viable tumorsSurvival
Miller (1993)36n/a69.40%3 yr OS 82% for CR after chemo, 46% for CR after chemo+surgery
Dodd (1999)50Lymph nodes or abdominal/pelvic mass: n = 32; lung: n = 10; bone: n = 3, liver: n = 166%5 yr OS 41% for CR after chemo, 33% for CR ater chemo+surgery
Siefker-Radtke (2004)31Lymph nodes: n = 4; lung n = 24; brain: n = 2; subcutaneous metastasis: n = 194%5 yr OS 33%
Lehmann (2009)44Lymph nodes: n = 30; lung: n = 8; bone: n = 2; adrenal gland: n = 1; brain n = 1; small intestine: n = 1; subcutaneous metastasis: n = 182%5 yr OS 28%
Kanzaki (2010)18Lung: n = 18100%5 yr OS 46.5%
Matsuguma (2011)32Lung: n = 32n/a5 yr OS 50%
Abe (2014)42Lymph node: n = 20; lung: n = 12; pelvic soft tissue: n = 3; local recurrence n = 2; subcutaneous metastases: n = 2; liver: n = 1; others n = 271%5 yr OS 31%
Metastasectomy

FEASIBILITY OF RADICAL CYSTECTOMY IN PATIENTS WITH METASTATIC BLADDER CANCER

Advanced local disease may often be encountered in the cytoreductive setting, adding complexity to surgical extirpation. Several studies have focused on the feasibility of RC in locally advanced, T4 BCa [66, 67]. In a series of 20 consecutive pT4 BCa patients undergoing RC, Nagele et al. found few perioperative complications, including insignificant pulmonary embolism and acute renal failure in one patient and an enterocutaneous fistula in another [67]. In another study, Moschini et al. found higher rate of transfusion and longer postoperative hospital stays for the cT4b patients, but perioperative complications as well as 30 day readmission rates were similar as those with cT1-3 UC [66]. Al-Daghmin recently evaluated the feasibility of robotic-assisted radical cystectomy (RARC) for patients with pT4 UC. While complication rates were similar, the 30- and 90-day mortalities were higher for pT4 patients than those with≤pT3 disease [68]. Furthermore, BMI has been found to be an independent predictor for postoperative complications [69]. Negative margin rates for T4 disease ranged from 74.4 to 91.1% [24, 26, 29, 66].

IDENTIFYING APPROPRIATE CANDIDATES FOR CYTOREDUCTIVE SURGERY FOR RADICAL CYSTECTOMY, ROLE OF IMAGING.

As no formal criteria exist, general oncologic principles may help guide in selecting candidates with metastatic BCa for RC-LND. At this time, it is felt that patients who are most likely to benefit from PSC followed by RC-LND are those that: demonstrated response to chemotherapy, have a minimal metastatic burden, have resectable tumors, and/or a period (3 months) in which disease stability has been demonstrated without progression [64]. In particular, retrospective studies have suggested prolonged survival in patients with oligometastatic LN or lung metastases after local control and even metastatectomy [59, 60, 62, 65]. In addition, host factors such as age, sex, and comorbidity as well as performance status may play vital roles in patient selection. Future advances in the understanding of the molecular mechanisms behind BCa oncogenesis may help to distinguish indolent from aggressive variants of mBCa. For example, Kim et al. used next-generation sequencing to identify genomic subsets of high-grade BCa associated with favorable and unfavorable outcomes post RC [70]. Ultimately, the efficacy of aggressive surgical extirpation in the metastatic setting will need to be verified in well-designed prospective trials.

CONCLUSION

Surgical extirpation of the primary tumor may be an important component in the management of metastatic BCa. Existing retrospective data demonstrate efficacy in carefully selected patients, especially after favorable response to systemic chemotherapy. Surgical extirpation has been demonstrated to be feasible even with locally advanced disease in the post-chemo setting. Though highly morbid, perioperative outcomes after RC-LND have improved with the advent of minimally invasive surgery and enhanced postsurgical pathways. The time is ripe for well-designed, prospective, trials to test the efficacy of cystectomy for metastatic BCa.
  68 in total

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Authors:  H W Herr; S M Donat; D F Bajorin
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Authors:  R C Flanigan; S E Salmon; B A Blumenstein; S I Bearman; V Roy; P C McGrath; J R Caton; N Munshi; E D Crawford
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2001-12-06       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Induction chemotherapy followed by surgery in node positive bladder cancer.

Authors:  Richard P Meijer; Laura S Mertens; Bas W van Rhijn; Axel Bex; Henk G van der Poel; Wim Meinhardt; J Martijn Kerst; Andre M Bergman; Annemarie Fioole-Bruining; Erik van Werkhoven; Simon Horenblas
Journal:  Urology       Date:  2013-11-15       Impact factor: 2.649

Review 4.  Systematic review and cumulative analysis of oncologic and functional outcomes after robot-assisted radical cystectomy.

Authors:  Bertram Yuh; Timothy Wilson; Bernie Bochner; Kevin Chan; Joan Palou; Arnulf Stenzl; Francesco Montorsi; George Thalmann; Khurshid Guru; James W F Catto; Peter N Wiklund; Giacomo Novara
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2015-01-02       Impact factor: 20.096

5.  Immune Checkpoint Blockade in Metastatic Urothelial Cancer.

Authors:  Arjun Vasant Balar
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2017-05-08       Impact factor: 44.544

6.  Outcome of postchemotherapy surgery after treatment with methotrexate, vinblastine, doxorubicin, and cisplatin in patients with unresectable or metastatic transitional cell carcinoma.

Authors:  P M Dodd; J A McCaffrey; H Herr; M Mazumdar; J Bacik; G Higgins; M G Boyle; H I Scher; D F Bajorin
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  1999-08       Impact factor: 44.544

7.  Neoadjuvant methotrexate, vinblastine, doxorubicin and cisplatin for histologically proven lymph node positive bladder cancer.

Authors:  J A Nieuwenhuijzen; A Bex; W Meinhardt; J M Kerst; J H Schornagel; H VAN Tinteren; S Horenblas
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 7.450

8.  Pattern of failure and survival of patients with metastatic urothelial tumors relapsing after cis-platinum-based chemotherapy.

Authors:  M A Dimopoulos; L Finn; C J Logothetis
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9.  Characteristics and outcomes of patients with pT4 urothelial carcinoma at radical cystectomy: a retrospective international study of 583 patients.

Authors:  Derya Tilki; Robert S Svatek; Pierre I Karakiewicz; Hendrik Isbarn; Oliver Reich; Wassim Kassouf; Yves Fradet; Giacomo Novara; Hans-Martin Fritsche; Patrick J Bastian; Jonathan I Izawa; Christian G Stief; Vincenzo Ficarra; Seth P Lerner; Mark Schoenberg; Colin P Dinney; Eila Skinner; Yair Lotan; Arthur I Sagalowsky; Shahrokh F Shariat
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 7.450

10.  Radical cystectomy and extended pelvic lymphadenectomy: survival of patients with lymph node metastasis above the bifurcation of the common iliac vessels treated with surgery only.

Authors:  Kenneth Steven; Asger L Poulsen
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2007-08-14       Impact factor: 7.450

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Authors:  Yadong Guo; Xiaoliang Jie; Aihong Zhang; Wentao Zhang; Ruiliang Wang; Junfeng Zhang; Shiyu Mao; Yuan Wu; Longsheng Wang; Ziwei Zhang; Yang Yan; Ping Wang; Xudong Yao
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